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IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology

eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308

RISK ANALYSIS AND ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARD MANAGEMENT


K. Veerabhadram1, K. Satti Babu2
1

Professor in Civil Engineering, GITAM Institute of Technology, GU, Visakhapatnam


2
Ph.D. Scholar in Civil Engineering, GIT, GU

Abstract
Risk is defined as the possibility of loss or injury. Hazard is defined as the source of risk Toxicity is describes as capability to
produce an adverse effect on living organisms. Risk assessment refers to the factual bases for determining exposure, adverse
effects (i.e., toxicity) and dose-response relationships and for predicting their nature and magnitude in humans.
Any organization has a legal and moral obligation to safeguard the health and welfare of the general public and to ensure
environmental safety. All manufacturing process are to some extent. Hazardous but in processes involving hazardous substances
such as petroleum, natural gas and other chemicals. There are additional special hazards associated with the properties of the
substances and process conditions. The designer must be aware of these hazards, and ensure, through the application of Sound
Engineering practice, that the risks are reduced to acceptable levels.
A qualitative approach to the risk analysis and Environmental Hazard Management is presented in this paper along with a
hypothetical Gas Collecting Station and a Dispersion Model.

...............................................................................................***.........................................................................................
INTRODUCTION
It has long since been known that industrial establishments
are the major sources of environmental pollution. The
inherent operational inadequacies of industries, chemical
processing plants, oil refineries, atomic power plants are
found to be the major causes of environmental hazard.
Although a Civil Engineer is well acquainted with the
techniques involved in Environmental impact Assessment,
due to the various developments that have taken place in the
field of Environmental Science, the Civil Engineer needs to
be more innovative and enterprising.
The Civil Engineer has to possess certain knowledge of the
more complicated techniques used to evaluate the risk to the
environment and to manage the hazards and accidents
arising from the risk.
Therefore, a qualitative and quantitative approach to the risk
analysis and Environmental Hazard Management is
presented in this paper along with a case study of a
hypothetical Gas Collecting Station

Hazard Operability (HAZOP) Study: This examines the


cause effect relationship for various process units under
operation i.e., the various consequences that are brought
about by certain deviation in process parameters such as
pressure, temperature etc.
Hazard Analysis (HAZAN): This involves the quantification
of hazard and the probability of occurrence of hazard after a
hazard is identified and its cause effect relationship
established using Reliability Techniques and Fault Tree
Analysis (FTA).

HAZARD IDENTIFICATION (HAZID)


Hazard identification is carried out by studying the process
involved in the industrial activity, the piping and
instrumentation and control systems. This involves the
preparation of layout maps of the process units and the study
of the process taking place and thereby reducing the risk
factors associated with the process. This gives a qualitative
idea of the various hazards that may occur in the process
area.

Fire and Explosion Index


Steps involved in identification and assessment of hazards:
The various steps in identification and assessment of
hazards are
i) Hazard identification HAZID Failure Mode Analysis
Accident Scenario.
ii) Hazard operability study (HAZOP).
iii) Hazard analysis (HAZAN).
Hazard Identification (HAZID): This consists of
recognizing the various hazards that could occur, their mode
or occurrence and the areas in which a hazard may occur
and its area or influence.

The safety and loss prevention guide developed by the Dow


Chemical Company, and published by the American
Institute of Chemical Engineer, Dow (1973), gives a method
for evaluating the potential hazards of a process and
assessing the safety and loss prevention measures needed. A
numerical Fire and Explosion Index is calculated, based
on the nature of the process and the properties of the
materials. The larger the value of the index, the more
hazardous is the process. When used to evaluate the design
of a new plant, the index is normally calculated after the
piping and Instrumentation diagrams and equipment layout
have been prepared, and is used a a guide to the selection

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Volume: 03 Special Issue: 16 | ICPECDM-2014 | Dec-2014, Available @ http://www.ijret.org

153

IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology

eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308

and design of the preventive and protection equipment


needed for safe plant operation. It may be calculated at an
early stage in the process design, after the preliminary flowsheets have been prepared, and will indicate whether
alternative, less hazardous, processes should be considered.

*
Failure / rupture of safety valve
*
Failure / rupture of tanks / equipment
The various possible scenarios that may occur after the
release due to the failures indentified above are represented
in the form of a flow chart given overleaf.

Dispersion studies

HAZARDS

Pollutants emitted into the atmosphere are mixed thoroughly


with the surrounding air and diluted by atmospheric
dispersion. This dispersion is primarily due to turbulent
diffusion and bulk air flow.

The main hazards likely to be caused due to any failure/


rupture in equipment are generally classified as under :
(i)
Fire This may either cause formation of a
pressure wave or Heat Radiation
(ii)
Toxicity The release of hazardous material in
the form of liquid or vapour may lead to high
toxicity
(iii)
Explosion The dispersion of liquid or vapour
which on subsequent ingnition may result in a
vapour cloud explosion which leads to heat
radiation and pressure wave formation.

The Gaussian plume Model


The present tendency is to interpret dispersion data in terms
of the Gaussian model. The standard deviations are related
to the eddy diffusivities through the equations, functions of
downwind distance x from the source as well as the
atmospheric stability conditions.

Gas Collection Module


The following operating stages are involved in the Gas
Collection Module:
Manifolding of gas and liquid: The well fluid lines from the
wells are combined into the production and Test Separators
respectively. The manifold is provided with pressure
indicators, shut down valves and pressure safety valves on
production and Test Headers respectively.
Liquid separation in Production and Test Separators: The
natural gas and the liquid are separated in vessels called
separators by cyclonic recycling and gravity separation. The
production and Test Separators are provided with pressure
safety valves respectively. The liquid from the separators is
taken to the Condensate Recovery System.
Condensate Recovery: The liquid hydrocarbon condensate
along with water, if any, is taken to the condensate K.O.
Drum whichis designed as storage cum-separator vessel to
carry out 3-phase separation of gas, oil and water.
Filtration: The gas after pressure reduction is fed to the final
polishing filter which is fitted with filter elements which are
capable of removing 99.9% of solid/ liquid particles of size
above 0.5 micron.
Flare System: All the safety valve discharges are connected
to a flare header which joins to the Flare K.O. Drum which
separates any flared liquid which would otherwise create
fire spitting from the stack. A flare stack is located at a
distance of 90 m away from the K.O. Drum. The flare
system is designed for automatic and unmanned operation.

TYPES OF ACCIDENTS
Based on the information so far gathered from the Fire and
Explosion Index Approach and Process and Instrumentation
Analysis, the following typical accident cases are
indentified.

HAZARD ANALYSIS
An operability study will identify potential hazards, but
gives not guidance on the likelihood of an accident
occurring, or the loss suffered; this is left to the intuition of
the team members. Incidents usually occur through the
coincident failure of two or more items; failure of
equipment, control systems and instruments, and misoperation. The sequence of events that leads to hazardous
incident can be shown as a fault tree.

HAZARD MANAGEMENT
So far the hazards have been indentified, their operability
has been discussed and they have been analyzed which
collectively have given us a qualitative and quantitative
perception of the risk. Thus, a cause effect relationship has
been established.
The next step would naturally be the prevention Control and
Relief operations pertaining to the environmental hazard.
Such a treatment can be classified under the heading
Hazard Management.
The Hazard Management consists in the following steps:

Basic Preventive and Protective Measures


The basic preventive and protective measures that should be
adopted in all industrial processes are given as below:
(i)
Adequate and secure water supplies for fire fighting
(ii)
Correct structural design of vessels, piping and
steel work
(iii)
Pressure relief devices
(iv)
Corrosion resistant materials, and/or adequate
corrosion allowances
(v)
Segregation of reactive materials
(vi)
Earthing of electrical equipment
(vii)
Safe location of auxiliary electrical equipment ,
transformers, switch gear
(viii)
Provision of back-up utility supplies and services
(ix)
Compliance with national codes and standards
(x)
Fail safe instrumentation

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Volume: 03 Special Issue: 16 | ICPECDM-2014 | Dec-2014, Available @ http://www.ijret.org

154

IJRET: International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology

(xi)
(xii)
(xiii)
(xiv)

(xv)
(xvi)
(xvii)
(xviii)
(xix)
(xx)

Provision for access of emergency vehicles and the


evacuation of personnel.
Adequate drainage for spills and fire fighting water
Insulation of hot surfaces
No glass equipment should be used for flammable
hazardous materials unless no suitable alternative is
available.
Adequate separation of hazardous equipment
Protection of pipe racks and cable trays from fire
Provision of block valves on lines to main
processing areas
Protection of fired equipment ( heaters , furnaces
against accidental explosion and fire
Safe design and location of control rooms
Maintenance of proper separation distances
between process units.

(iv)

Special instrumentation in the form of temperature


controls, pressure controls and flow controls
Internal explosion protection along with dump,
blow down spill control
Remote operation and availability of combustible
gas monitors
Proper civil engineering design in the form of
Dykeing, blast and barrier valves.

(v)
(vi)
(vii)

Relief Operations
The relief operations that have to be carried out for the
mitigation of major accidents are as follows:
(i)

Prompt intimation of the accident to the nearest fire


station
Following the emergency plan containing system of
organization used to fight the emergency, the alarm
and the communication routes, guidelines for
fighting the emergency, information about
hazardous materials and possible accident
Following the contingency plan for the mitigation
of accident in case of fire, explosion, gas leakage
and hazardous material spill.

(ii)

Training of personnel and public Awareness


Training programmes in safety and accident prevention
should be organized for all levels of employees with a view
to familiarizing them with general safety rules and safety
procedures to be followed in various operational activities
and to update their knowledge in safety, accident
prevention, industrial hygiene, emergency procedures, first
aid and use of various safety appliances.
Public Awareness programmes necessary for taking timely
action by the neighboring population/ inhabitants in the
event of major emergencies should be made in coordination
with civic authorities and local area representatives to
prevent heavy casualties.
First Aid Training which includes first aid techniques and
procedures for artificial respiration should be imparted to all
the employees as well as public with the help of qualifying
medical and paramedical staff.

Control Measures
Containment of toxic materials by sound design of
equipment and piping.
Disposal of toxic material by providing effective vent
stacks to disperse the material.
vented from pressure relief devices and by the use of
vent scrubbers .
Ventilation should be provided adequately by the use
of open structures and ventilation systems.
There should be proper escape routes, emergency and
rescue equipment, safety showers and eyebaths
provided near the processing plant.

Fire and Explosion protection


The fire and explosion protection has to be provided in
the following forms
(i)
(ii)
(iii)

Provision of flame traps which contain and arrest


the propagation of flame
Provision of water tanks, hose pipes, sprinkler
system and fire extinguishers for dousing the fire.
Adequate fire proofing should be provided

eISSN: 2319-1163 | pISSN: 2321-7308

(iii)

CONCLUSION
Environmental Engineering has fast emerged as a separate
and self-sustaining discipline over the recent years. The
more subject specific topics like Risk Analysis and
Industrial Safety which have hitherto been dealt with under
chemical and Industrial Safety have come under the purview
of Environmental Engineering. Accidents of catastrophic
degree such as the Chernobyl Nuclear disaster (erstwhile
USSR), the Bhopal Gas Tragedy and the more oil spills that
have occurred during the Gulf War have made both the
governments and the public more aware of the detrimental
effects of the environmental hazards on life and property.
In this context, the Risk Analysis and Environmental Hazard
Management has become an integral part of the multifaceted
discipline of Environmental Engineering. Thus, the
foregoing discussion serves as an effective tool for the
preservation and protection of environment from various
hazards.

REFERENCES
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4.

5.

Irving.N. Sax.
Dangerous
properties
of
Hazardous Materials.
A. Guide to Hazard and operability studies (
Chemical Industries Association, London)
King.R. and Magid. J. ( 1979 ) Industrial Hazard
and Safety Handbook ( Newnes Butterworths )
Kletz. T.A. (1971) Inst. Chem. Eng. Sym. Ser. No.
34 75. Hazard analysis a quantitative approach to
safety.
Lawley . H.G. (1974) Loss prevention No. 8 (
AIchE ) 105 Operability studies and Hazard
analysis.

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Volume: 03 Special Issue: 16 | ICPECDM-2014 | Dec-2014, Available @ http://www.ijret.org

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